Inside: Learn ways to love your home even if it’s not your dream and how you can be grateful for the place you’re in now.

Homeownership has changed dramatically in the past few years. What some may have envisioned as part of the American dream seems much less realistic given the current costs.

So what can you do if your dream home no longer seems attainable? You can work on being grateful for what you have now while you do what you can to change it.

While there isn’t anything wrong with wanting more space or additional land, you’ll have a better mindset when you look for the good in what you have rather than solely focusing on what you don’t.

There may be a different home in your future, but for now, you can use these tips to love the home you have.

love your home

6 Ways to Love Your Home (Even if it’s Not Your Dream)

In my adult life, I’ve lived in six different homes. None of them were perfect.

Not one was my ‘dream home’ and yet I figured out there are ways to love your home even when it’s not your dream.

If you’ve been dissatisfied or frustrated with your home, I hope these tips help reframe your perspective.

Home should be a place of refuge and haven from the outside world. You can learn to love your home even with its annoyances and quirks.

Here are six ways to love your home, even if it’s not the one you’d dreamed of.

“Home is the nicest word there is.” -Laura Ingalls Wilder

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1. Remember what home is

What does the word ‘home’ mean to you? It’s easy to get caught up in the structure, square footage, amenities, and appearance when that isn’t the whole picture of what home is.

“A house is made of brick and mortar, but home is made by the people who live there.” -M.K. Soni

As you think about how to love your home (even if it isn’t your dream) keep in mind that your house is a structure, but home is the life that happens inside it.

It’s easy to get caught up with appearance and convenience and what you may imagine that you want or need. I’ve been guilty of thinking that a different house could improve my life, but really the house is just a shell and the moments and relationships that happen within it are what matters most.

There’s nothing wrong with dreaming about your ideal home unless it keeps you from being happy where you are now.

Keep in mind the true purpose of a home. All the bells and whistles that can come in a home won’t create peace within you and the relationships that exist there.

“In life we may live in many different homes, but where we are loved and feel safe that is the place where we are at home with family or friends.” -Catherine Pulsifer

love your home

2. Focus on what’s good

As you are figuring out how to love your home, focus first on the characteristics that you like about your home.

What does work well in your home? What would you miss if your next home didn’t have it?

I have found redeeming qualities in every place I’ve lived. Each one had some things I wish I could have brought to the next house.

For one it was the amount of cabinet space I had in the kitchen. For another, it was the beautiful rose bushes and large bedrooms. In the house I live in now it would be the garage and the peonies that bloom each year.

We also love our neighbors dearly so even if this house is not my dream, my neighbors are. Focusing on the positives and what I love here makes me feel better about my home.

What do you love about your home? Think about what you’d miss if you moved. It helps refresh your perspective when you focus on the parts you love and appreciate about where you live now.

3. Work with what you’ve got

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We’ve both owned a home we lived in as well as rented a couple of them. Sometimes living in a rental can feel confining. You aren’t able to change much or fix the things that bother you in many cases.

Shortly after we moved from our last rental to our current one, I found the book The Nesting Place: It Doesn’t Have to Be Perfect to Be Beautiful by Myquillyn Smith.

This book opened my eyes to possibilities I never would have imagined. Myquillyn is definitely more daring in her style and approach, but I loved that she got me to think outside the box and really try to invest more in where I’m living even if I don’t own it.

It was after reading that book that I bought fabric and recovered our toss pillows. I also bought secondhand curtains for the home and got an area rug.

While I didn’t opt to paint things like she did, my house felt much more like a home instead of a plain all-white rental after doing just those few simple things.

Initially, I didn’t want to invest time or money (not that I spent much) into this house. I thought it would be temporary, but ten years later we still live here and I’m so glad I chose to make this house home for however long we are here.

Look at your home as a challenge to solve rather than a problem. Whether you own or rent, think of creative solutions to the things that bother you. You can love your home even with its quirks.

decluttering lies

4. Focus on what you can control

A big part of how people feel in their homes relates to the state of their stuff. When you’re overwhelmed with the things you own, it’s hard to feel like you love your home.

The good news is, you can take back control over your stuff and decide to work through decluttering it.

Don’t fill your home with things that feel like burdens or remind you of past mistakes or sadness or regret.

Can you imagine how much more you could love your home if it only contained items you used and loved?

The excess is often what brings us down. It feels defeating and home is a constant reminder of chores that need to be done, projects that are unfinished, and messes that are waiting to be picked up.

Owning fewer things lessens the ability of your home to get out of control with stuff. If you aren’t sure where to start, you can begin with easy items to declutter or quick areas to declutter that have a big impact on your home.

Perhaps you’ve tried decluttering before but are still feeling unsettled in your space. Check out this list of reasons why your house still feels cluttered to see if they apply to you.

“I realized the clutter of my home was becoming more than just a personal annoyance and was actually affecting the quality of my life.” -C. E. Mroz

5. Highlight the things that make you happy

One great thing that comes from decluttering is clarity. The process helps provide a clearer picture of what you really like and what you don’t.

As you declutter the various areas in your home, you may discover things you loved that you’d even forgotten you had.

A beautiful part of decluttering is that in getting rid of the excess those favorite treasured items get to shine as they are no longer being overwhelmed by other things.

Find those things that bring you the most joy and put them front and center in your home. Don’t save your favorites and best for special occasions.

Every day is a special occasion so choose to use your things and enjoy them now. It will help you to love your home more.

“Don’t save anything for a special occasion. Being alive is a special occasion.” -Mary Englebreit

love your home

6. Choose gratitude

You’ll come to a point where you need to choose gratitude in order to love your home. It’s so easy to get a skewed perception of what we have to be grateful for when we see beautiful and expensive homes featured on shows on HGTV.

If you find that watching those shows makes you feel worse about the home you live in, stop watching them. It’s not helping you love your home more. Instead, it can breed envy and discontent.

Choose to be grateful for the roof over your head and the protection from the outside world. Your home provides warmth and comfort and a variety of things that many people in the world do not have the privilege of.

Being grateful will help you to love your home more as you choose to focus on the gift that it is rather than everything it’s not.

“Be grateful for the home you have, knowing that at this moment, all you have is all you need.” -Sarah Ban Breathnach

Ways to Love Your Home

Through remembering the true meaning of home, focusing on what you love, working with what you’ve got, clearing the clutter, and highlighting the favorites you are choosing to love your home.

I hope that you find your home to be a place of respite and love.

“Home sweet home. This is the place to find happiness. If one doesn’t find it here, one doesn’t find it anywhere.” -M. K. Soni

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33 Comments

  1. I recently downsized to a house half the size of the houses I’d lived in for the past 25 years. I really wasn’t looking forward to it as we all loved a big house. However, after decluttering and having shelving added and making plans for the garden, I love it here. I can see where I can fit all my stuff in and make the most of what I’ve got, plus it’s so much easier to clean!

      1. We live in a three bedroom one bathroom home as a family of four. Now the children have grown up it doesn’t feel as small! We have so many wonderful memories in this house – our home!
        It’s not as big as other peoples houses but our mortgage isn’t ridiculous either.
        I love our home 🏠

  2. I really enjoyed this article. You touched on so many things that are going on in my life and the stuggles I’ve had with clutter.

    So much excess is left from one son moving on as an adult and me struggling with not wanting to get rid of his momentos that I think he’ll regret not taking with him.

    I have always found going through things so difficult as I see sentiment in most things. And by donating them, even just going through stuff is painful. I know what needs to get done, I just don’t know where to begin! At the same time I want my space back…

  3. What a lovely post. I am thankful for a roof over my head, my Adult children and the freedom of living in retirement. What I don’t like about life is being a widow/pensioner living with a disability. Getting on in life is having FOCUS. I don’t focus on what I don’t have but on what I have.
    I have spent 8yrs. de-cluttering and still going. Secret is not becoming attached to your belongings. Hold them loosely. I live in the U.K. having a fight with online shopping but coping. I bought so much to make the home ready to pass on to my Adult Children and now my daughter is planning to live in the U.S.A.. She had her Visa appt cancelled due to the Coronavirua difficulty but a new appt is in May 7th. She will be embarking on a new life in America and I will be de-cluttering. I will miss her so much but she is ready to live her own life. My advice to her is to live more frugally and to learn to LIVE WITH LESS.
    Thank you for your blog Julianna. Best wishes

    1. Going through this now and have no idea how to start. I have multiple sclerosis and have moved a few times since my divorce and my daughter moved out when she went to college and came home during summer. She recently graduated and moved in with her boyfriend. I can’t seem to clear out the things left behind and move to the beach where I want to be just in case she were to want to come home. Well she recently got engaged and moved in for good with her boyfriend. I know. She needs to sprout er wings and fly and I need to declutter, downsize, and move to the beach while still able. So hard. I know she is happy and I’m happy for her so now I need to be a new kinda happy for myself!

      1. I gave my kids a deadline to clear out anything they did not want after years of pleading with them to sort through and decide what they wanted to keep. I did box up a few personal things I thought they might appreciate later, and delivered to their house, but all else was donated. They had not even missed the things. Blessings to you!

  4. Moving from a nice size house into a one bed apartment I thought the toughest part would be the cramped size. But I actually love having a smaller place. What I don’t like is that there are only 2 window’s, both on the same wall neither at an angle that gets sunlight at sun rise or sunset except during the middle of winter when the axis shifts slightly. I used to get seasonal depression due to lack of natural light and now sometimes I don’t want to go into my home after work because I know the darkness will dampen my mood. I have no yard for my dog to run and think it’s a little unfair to her. I’m trying to focus more on the positives since this is what I have right now. It’s close to work, I do like the layout except the lack of windows, it has a pool and a church next door that allows the neighbors to walk their dogs on their property. The grounds are pretty well maintained so not unsightly to walk around outside. I don’t want to live here forever but it’s not the worst that could be and does have things that I like.

  5. This article really touched my soul Sadly we forget that we have so many things in our life to be thankful for one is roof over our head for which 75% of the worlds populations is struggling for …so be thankful
    Thanks Juliana for this lovely article

  6. I found this article so informative. I have to stop looking at the beautiful houses on tv and where ever and be thankful to God for the one he gave me. Thanks again …😊🥰

  7. Love this article.! So helpful to remember and refocus and cultivate attitude of gratitude. We have recently downsized, got rid of a hoard of clutter and more to go. Realise I have an issue with emotional attachment to things ,but so liberating to let them go too! Especially when know they are being of benefit to others!
    Love the quote about a house is a structure…home is the life that happens in it!

  8. I am always planning for my next major life event. I know when I am over 70 years old, I need to move to
    independent living which will limit my space, especially for storage. That is why I’m downsizing even more now. Giving my sister half of my formal dishes. Mailing sentimental items Mother gave me to nieces on her side of the family.

    I try to always buy pre-owned books and then donate those I no longer need to my local thrift store. I have found great classic petite clothes on sites like Poshmark and Ebay. The more stuff we have, the less time we have for important things in life.

  9. I love how you brought up using or displaying your favorite things now and to stop waiting for that special occasion. That’s definitely the outlook I want to have more often.

  10. My mother and her sister are unable to stop buying (they are 91yo and 85yo and both living in their own homes). Their homes, basements and garages are filled to the point where it is uncomfortable. I have cleaned, organized, sent loads to charities, had a garage sale to help my Aunt and had a large auction for my mother. They start buying again and by the time I come home (they are in the Midwest and I live in Florida but spend most of my time there) everything is filled up again. This scenario has played out for years. I am worn out with this situation and at a loss as to how to help. Recently my Aunt was looking into senior living facilities. The realtor talked about bringing in someone to have an estate sale or auction to help her get ready for a downsize….she began crying and that ended that. I am at a loss as to how to help.

    1. I don’t know if this helps but this perfectly describes my grandmother, whom my sister and I cared for. What changed was not her, but us. Every time downsizing came up, my grandmother would back out of it, even when it was her idea. Assisted-living, a nursing home, all of it. It was stressful. We would help her clean out. It would fill back up again. Instead of trying to change her, we changed how we looked at it. Sure, we were worried that we would come over and find her on the floor. But in the end, at the age of 93, how much more life would she have had or even enjoyed had she downsized and moved anyway? So we stopped worrying about it. We just stopped worrying about all the things as well. So much stuff. And then, when she did die at 96, we sold the house with everything in it. We went through and found the sentimental things we wanted, and the new owners were thrilled. They probably paid off the entire house with what they sold out of it and so in the end, my sister and I changed our mindsets. We realized there was no way we could change hers.

  11. Thank you for this article! very insightful for me at this time. my husband loves our home but not the neighborhood. he would like to move to the country thats all. He keeps grumbling about it and it makes it hard to feel in love with our home. we do love our neighbours and the home just not the location. This article has great tips for loving home again.

  12. I have lived in a awkward and small like trailer for over 10 years and raised my kids in it. I have felt little control over what I can do to make it better so I have given up. This article has helped me look at things differently in how I can make it better! Definitely will share this so I can reference back to it!

  13. Thank you for this article, it’s so timely for me. I moved from a house 3x the size of where I am now. The little “cottage” as I call it has many quirks and needs fixes but overall, I am super grateful for a solid roof and four walls.

  14. In the process of leaving a beautiful home and downsizing to a small condo that is not nearly as nice as what I’m used too. But I am putting a large amount of money back into my retirement and lowering my property taxes. It’s a smart move for me at 72. Your words have helped me understand how important it is to continue to be grateful and focus on the good. I will make it a wonderful place to live for me and my beloved dogs.❤️

  15. Just found this article today. My struggle is similar but different. I have the family home after a divorce and now just me and 1 daughter left. Given the market – proximity to University and some medical facilities I can’t sell my home right now and there really isn’t much to downsize into in my current neighborhood. But I find it too big. I’ve done the de-cluttering but wish I could move to something that better reflects me and is smaller. So trying to find out how to love my home until I am in a position to move and not hate all the space.

  16. Are al rental premises in the US fit for human habitation? Many in the UK are not. They are cold, damp, mould growing on the walls, leaks from ceiling and windows; generally depressing. And you can’t complain as the landlord is likely to eject you — he doesn’t have to give a reason – – and rentals you can afford are no better, and very hard to come by.

  17. We moved from our own house to a rented property almost 9 years ago to be town and have everything at our finger tips.We pay rent but no repairs, our landlord replaces any white goods that need replacing..the flat was brand new when we moved in so it’s really comfortable and we don’t have any money worries in retirement. We did dwclutter when moving but did d this ongoing as we replace thing…this article made us appreciate having a roof over our head is what’s important.

  18. I moved out of a 3,000 sq ft house into a 700 sq ft home in 1997. It was my grandma’s house. My step grandpa built it about 100 years ago. I didn’t realize how much I loved it until I moved in with my mom to take care of her. I lived there for 2 years and became very ill. I’m in remission now and so thankful for everything, especially this little house. Thank you for such a good article. I really enjoyed reading it and everyone’s comments.

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